


And, until recently, there wasn’t a usable Mac version of this app. But, as I wrote back in June, Microsoft started shipping serviceable clients for OS X and iOS.īut the BMW of RDP clients is still Devolutions’ Remote Desktop Manager. And, to get to the server, you need RDP.įor a long time, Microsoft ignored sysadmins and architects who used the Mac.

But the payback for all that heaviness is the ability to administer Windows Server graphically. Let’s face it, Windows Server is heavy - much heavier than Linux (as the folks I hung out with at AWS re:Invent last week kept telling me). If, like me, you are a Mac user who has responsibility for managing a large number of Windows Server instances running on EC2 in AWS (or in a data center, should you be so unlucky as to have to run on physical hardware), you know that Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) is the key to, well, everything. (If you are also interested in a technique to secure RDP connections without having to open TCP 3389, please see this post about Remote Desktop Gateway.) Remote Desktop Manager running natively on Mac OS X (click to enlarge)
